Artificial intelligence integrated directly into your diagnostic workflow
DICOM Vision integrates artificial intelligence directly into the clinical imaging workflow. AI algorithms analyze medical images automatically, providing radiologists and clinicians with instant decision support — from anomaly detection to quantitative analysis.
AI models scan images for potential pathological findings including lung nodules, fractures, intracranial hemorrhages, masses, and other abnormalities. Detected findings are highlighted directly on the image with confidence scores.
Automatic delineation of anatomical structures — organs, vessels, bones, and soft tissues — enables precise volumetric analysis and surgical planning. Segmentation results can be visualized in both 2D and 3D.
AI-powered CAD provides structured analysis across modalities:
Automated measurements including tumor volume tracking, bone density analysis, vessel diameter quantification, and longitudinal comparison across serial studies.
AI in DICOM Vision is not a separate product — it’s embedded in the viewer. Results appear as DICOM overlays, structured reports (SR), and interactive annotations that clinicians can review, modify, and confirm within their normal workflow.
DICOM Vision’s AI platform is used by leading hospitals and research institutions for both clinical practice and research. The platform supports validation studies, algorithm benchmarking, and clinical trial imaging workflows.
AI assists radiologists by automatically detecting anomalies, highlighting regions of interest, segmenting anatomical structures, and providing quantitative measurements. This reduces reading time, improves diagnostic accuracy, and helps prioritize urgent cases.
No. AI in DICOM Vision is designed as a clinical decision support tool. It augments the radiologist's expertise by providing a second read, flagging potential findings, and automating repetitive measurements. The final diagnosis always remains with the clinician.
DICOM Vision supports anomaly detection (lung nodules, fractures, hemorrhages), anatomical segmentation (organ, vessel, and structure delineation), quantitative measurements (volume, density, growth tracking), and computer-aided diagnosis (CAD) across multiple modalities.
Yes. DICOM Vision's architecture supports integration of third-party AI algorithms and models. Results are displayed as DICOM overlays, structured reports, or annotations directly within the viewer.
AI processing is performed on cloud infrastructure and results are typically available within seconds of study upload. For urgent cases, AI can automatically prioritize the worklist.